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France Hutchison - Masters of Ceremony (MC)
Free Agent, Leadership Team Coach and Learning Advisor and Associate Faculty Member, Canada School of Public Service
France Hutchison is a free agent with the Treasury Board Secretariat and a member of the faculty of the Canada School of Public Service. She was the manager and assigned coach in leadership development programs as well as the instigator of the Government of Canada Coaching Network. She specializes in coaching managers and their teams to adopt coaching-inspired techniques to better deal with complexity, change and human relationships.
She offers her time in coaching leaders to help them find the courage to lead authentically. Her human side, her values as well as her desire to contribute to the emergence of a coaching culture within the public service led her to develop collaborative projects during the pandemic. For the first time, the International Coaching Week in May 2020 and the Coaching Summit in December 2020 were a great success. More than 1600 public servants received individual and virtual coaching services from a community of more than 300 coaches involved.
An agile trainer, an outstanding communicator, and an inspiring author. Other psychometric tools, visualization, meditation, yoga and mentoring are also in her baggage of leadership transformation.
She enjoys collaborating, writing, creating movement and especially making an impact! Her passion for health and wellness has led her to many accomplishments and to surpassing herself during Ironman triathlons.
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Taki Sarantakis
President, Canada School of Public Service
Taki Sarantakis has been President of the Canada School of Public Service since July 2018, having previously served as Associate Secretary of the Treasury Board at the Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat. Mr. Sarantakis spent most of his career at Infrastructure Canada, including as Assistant Deputy Minister of Policy and Communications.
In 2011 Mr. Sarantakis was awarded Canada's Public Service Award of Excellence in Public Policy, and in 2013 he was a recipient of the Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal.
Prior to joining the federal government, Mr. Sarantakis was a doctoral candidate at the University of Toronto. He holds a B.A. and an M.A. from York University in Toronto, as well as an Executive Certificate in Public Policy from the Harvard Kennedy School of Government. He is a graduate of the Rotman School of Management's Institute of Corporate Directors Education Program, holding the ICD.D designation.
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Neil Bouwer
Vice-President, Canada School of Public Service
Neil Bouwer has also served as an Assistant Deputy Minister at the Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat, Natural Resources Canada, the Canadian Food Inspection Agency, and the Privy Council Office of Canada; and in executive positions at the Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre of Canada, Human Resources and Social Development Canada and the Business Development Bank of Canada. He has also worked at the Department of Finance and Western Economic Diversification Canada, and has Economics degrees from McGill University and St. Thomas University. Neil actively supports the Government of Canada policy and data communities, the Advanced Policy Analyst Program and the Free Agent HR Program.
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Mélanie Robert
Executive Director, Open Government and Portals, Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat
Mélanie Robert is the Executive Director of Open Government at the Treasury Board of
Canada Secretariat (TBS). She leads the Government of Canada’s efforts to open data and information and to increase accountability and citizen participation, and manages Canada’s Open Government and Open Data Portal (open.canada.ca) as well as the Online Access to Information Request Service.
With over 20 years of experience in the federal public service, Mélanie has lead business analysis, regulation and enforcement work and communications and consultations for a variety of technology and innovation files.
You can follow Mélanie on Twitter @MelRobrt
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Marc Brouillard
Acting Chief Information Officer, Government of Canada
Marc Brouillard is the Chief Technology Officer for the Government of Canada, in the Office of the Chief Information Officer (OCIO) and is currently acting as the interim Chief Information Officer of Canada at the Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat. Marc also served as deputy departmental CIO and acting departmental CIO at Treasury Board Secretariat.
Prior to joining the Government of Canada, Marc was VP of Business Development for a local eCommerce Services start-up. Prior to that, he spent 13 years at MONTAGE IT Services, a division of MTS/Allstream,
where he held numerous positions in technology consulting and business development.
Marc provides government-wide vision and strategic leadership in pursuing world class excellence in digital integration, information management and technology, and cyber security. He has had a long and successful career as a senior public and private sector executive in information management and technology.
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Justin Reich
Assistant Professor in Comparative Studies and Director, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Teaching Systems Lab
Justin Reich is a learning scientist interested in learning at scale, practice-based teacher education, and the future of learning in a networked world. He is an Assistant Professor in the Comparative Media Studies/Writing department at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the director of the MIT Teaching Systems Lab. The Teaching Systems Lab designs, implements, and researches the future of teacher learning. He is the instructor for five free, openly-licensed MOOCs about change leadership in education. He is the author of Failure to Disrupt: Why Technology Alone Can’t Transform Education, forthcoming from Harvard University Press. He is also the host of the TeachLab Podcast. He was previously the Richard L. Menschel HarvardX Research Fellow, where he led the initiative to study large-scale open online learning through HarvardX, and a lecturer at the Harvard Graduate School of Education. He is an alumni and faculty associate of the Berkman Klein Center for Internet and Society. His writings have appeared in Science, The Atlantic, Educational Researcher, the Washington Post, Inside Higher Ed, the Christian Science Monitor, and other publications. For several years, he wrote the EdTechResearcher blog at Education Week. Justin started his career teaching wilderness medicine, and later taught high school world history and history electives, and coached wrestling and outdoor activities.
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Nisa Malli
Work Stream Manager, Brookfield Institute
Nisa Malli is a research, writer, and policy wonk with 13 years of experience in public policy and program delivery, inside and outside government. As the manager of the Brookfield Institute for Innovation + Entrepreneurship’s Innovative and Inclusive Economy research program, she leads teams studying the intersection of technology, labour, economic growth, and inequality, including work on the digital divide. Previously, Nisa was part of the team that started the Privy Council Office’s Impact and Innovation Unit, a policy lab at the heart of the federal government, an advisor to the Deputy Ministers’ Committee on Policy Innovation, and a City of Toronto Urban Fellow, working on skills training and job-readiness programs for social assistance recipients and improving access to housing. Prior to joining the public service, she ran digital literacy programming for seniors, newcomers, and job seekers out of a community library. Her work on emerging technologies, government digital service design, and inclusion and equity in innovation is grounded in understanding and helping address the barriers people face in navigating online services and information or trying to maintain their skills under variable access situations.
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Katherine Rusk
Associate, Technology, Osler
Katherine is an associate in Osler’s Technology group in Vancouver, BC. Her practice focuses on advising emerging and high growth companies navigate the complex intersection of data protection, intellectual property, and advertising. She is experienced advising clients across multiple industry verticals, including emerging technology, financial services, pharmaceuticals & cosmetics, cannabis, media & entertainment, gaming, agriculture, and retail.
Katherine is actively involved in the data security and intellectual property space. She is a Certified Information Privacy Professional / Canada (CIPP/C), a member of the International Association of Privacy Professionals, Women in Cybersecurity, and the Intellectual Property Institute of Canada’s Young Practitioners’ Committee. Katherine is a frequent speaker and writer on data use and collection, privacy, intellectual property, and new technology. She has appeared before the Federal Court, Ontario Superior Court, and Quebec Superior Court.
Katherine serves on the Disbursement Advisory Committee for True Patriot Love, Canada’s leading military charity. She is the co-founder of the Captain Nichola Goddard Fund, supporting servicewomen and female veterans.
Prior to joining Osler, Katherine held roles at another leading law firm, as part of a Federal Minister’s staff, and with the North Atlantic Treaty Organization’s Atlantic HQ.
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John Kost
Distinguished Vice President, Gartner
As a Distinguished Vice President in Government research, John Kost focuses on the ability of government to execute transformation by engaging senior government political and executive leaders in understanding and improving the role of the government CIO, IT governance models, citizen experience management, critical success factors for shared services and centralization, and, for IT executives, in mastering the politics of IT leadership in government. Mr. Kost is internationally renowned for his work in IT governance, government transformation, information technology management and procurement reform.
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